Sportsman's Repository

John LAWRENCE   |   John SCOTT

Item#: 75027 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Sportsman's Repository

“THE ABLEST OF ENGLISH ANIMAL ENGRAVERS”: THE SPORTSMAN’S REPOSITORY, WITH 37 FINE ENGRAVINGS OF HORSES AND DOGS, 1845

SCOTT, John; [LAWRENCE, John]. The Sportsman’s Repository; Comprising a Series of Highly Finished Engravings, Representing the Horse and the Dog, in All Their Varieties. London: Henry G. Bohn, 1845. Quarto, contemporary three-quarter green pebbled morocco gilt, raised bands, marbled boards, endpapers and edges.

Third edition of this lovely collection of 37 full-page engravings of horses and dogs, with engraved additional title page, 13 full-page engravings of horses, 24 full-page engravings of dogs and two engraved headpieces, all by John Scott after paintings by Marshall, Reinagle, Gilpin, Stubbs, and Cooper. “Scott became the ablest of English animal engravers, and his… Sportsman’s Repository earned for him great celebrity” (DNB). A lovely copy with fine provenance.

The anonymous author of the text accompanying Scott’s fine images is John Lawrence, an accomplished sportsman and prolific author who published well-regarded treatises on the care and management of horses and livestock. He is best remembered, however, as an early advocate of animal rights. “In nearly every one of his numerous publications, Lawrence taught the duty of humanity to animals…” and strove to root out “that horrible propensity in the human breast, a sense of sport and delight in witnessing the torture of brute animals” (DNB). In the section on bulldogs—originally bred for bull- and bear-baiting—Lawrence rails against the cruelty of such spectacles, and in the Appendix includes a chapter entitled, “Cruelties Exercised Upon Animals.” In addition to the engraved plates, this work is richly illustrated with a full-page woodcut and numerous vignette woodcuts by Thomas Bewick. First published 1820, and again in 1826. See Schwerdt I, 305 (“a good book on sporting dogs”). Owner signature of Elisabeth “Pansy” Ireland, owner of Pebble Hill Plantation in Georgia and an accomplished horsewoman and collector; dealer description tipped to rear flyleaf.

Faint embrowning to a few leaves of text; some rubbing to bottom of front paper board, contemporary morocco-gilt handsome. Plates generally clean. An excellent copy of this scarce work.

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